More coronavirus patients in English hospitals
than in March
Sharp rise in infections in the north of England have
exacerbated political tensions between London and the rest of the country.
By CHARLIE
COOPER 10/12/20, 2:45 PM CET Updated 10/12/20, 2:50 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/uk-england-coronavirus-more-patients-hospitals-than-march/
LONDON —
England's emergency "Nightingale" hospitals will be
"mobilized" again in the north of the country to provide extra
capacity for local health services amid a steep rise in COVID-19 infections,
NHS officials said Monday.
Stephen
Powis, national medical director of NHS England, said the region's Nightingales
— based in Manchester, Sunderland and Harrogate — would be ready to take
patients in the next few weeks.
It is the
first time any of England's seven Nightingale hospitals — set up at the height
of the first wave of coronavirus in Europe — have been brought back into
service after being placed on standby as infection rates dipped during the
summer months.
Later on
Monday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson is expected to set out a new three-tier
system of COVID-19 restrictions for England's regions, with parts of the north
east and north west, where infections are currently significantly higher than
in other parts of the country, expected to be placed in the higher tiers with
the toughest measures.
Speaking at
a Downing Street press conference ahead of the prime minister's statement to
MPs, England's Deputy Chief Medical Officer Jonathan Van Tam said that while
infection rates were growing across the country, the reason the epidemic was
growing fastest in the north — in particular the north west — was "almost
certainly" due to the fact that disease levels here "never dropped as
far ... as they did in the south" during the summer.
His words
are likely to add weight to criticisms from local and regional leaders —
including mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham — that when national
lockdown restrictions were eased earlier this year, it came too early for the
north west where infection rates remained higher than in London and the south.
Powis,
speaking alongside Van Tam, said that there were now more coronavirus patients
in hospitals in England than just before national restrictions were introduced
on March 23.
Hospitals
in the north west and north east had seen a sevenfold increase in coronavirus
patients requiring intensive care in the past four weeks, he said. "If
infections continue to rise, in four more weeks they could be treating more
patients than they were in the peak of the first wave."
Infection
rates have been particularly high among young adults, with the return of
students to universities being linked to surging infection rates in major
cities. But Van Tam said there were signs of the virus spreading to older, more
vulnerable age groups.
Authors:
Charlie Cooper
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